SEC Adopts New Short Form Criteria to Replace Credit Ratings

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2011-155

Washington, D.C., July 26, 2011 – The Securities and Exchange Commission today voted unanimously to adopt new rules in light of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act to remove credit ratings as eligibility criteria for companies seeking to use “short form” registration when registering securities for public sale.

Forms S-3 and F-3 are the “short forms” used by eligible issuers to register securities offerings under the Securities Act. Companies that qualify for these short forms can offer securities “off the shelf” or on an expedited basis.

Companies currently qualify to use these forms if they are registering an offering of non-convertible securities, such as debt securities, that have received an investment grade rating by at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO).

The new rules eliminate the credit ratings criteria and replace it with four new tests, one of which must be satisfied for an issuer to use Form S-3 or Form F-3. In order to ease transition for companies, the rules include a temporary, three-year grandfather provision.

“This action is part of our effort to reduce reliance on credit ratings, as the Dodd-Frank Act requires all financial regulators to do,” said SEC Chairman Mary L. Schapiro. “The new rules provide an appropriate and workable alternative to credit ratings for determining whether an issuer should be able to use short form registration and have access to the shelf offering process.”

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FACT SHEET

Security Ratings

Background

Short-Form Eligibility

Under the federal securities laws, a company offering securities must register the offer and sale of those securities with the SEC unless the sale is otherwise exempt.

The SEC’s rules generally allow a non-asset-backed security issuer to use “short-form” registration if that company meets two categories of criteria.

The first category related to issuers requires among other things that the company has been subject to the SEC’s reporting provisions and filing its periodic reports in a timely manner for at least one year. An issuer is required to meet all of the criteria in the first category.

The second category contains a list of transaction requirements of which issuers need to satisfy only one of the criteria. One of the options in this category involves a company having at least $75 million in common equity held by unaffiliated shareholders. Another provision in this second category – that would allow an issuer to use short-form registration for an offering of non-convertible securities such as debt securities – provides that those securities be rated investment grade by at least one credit rating agency that is a nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO).

If a company qualifies for short-form registration, it is allowed to rely on its quarterly, annual and other reports filed with the SEC to provide historical and future information about itself, rather than repeating the information in the prospectus or amending the prospectus as future reports are filed. The prospectus disclosure in these offerings describes the particular securities being offered and focuses on other offering-specific information. The ability to “incorporate by reference” historic and future SEC reports for the company information can provide significant cost and time savings for companies. The short-form registration forms include Form S-3 for domestic companies and Form F-3 for foreign private issuers.

Shelf Registration

Companies that are “short-form eligible” also are allowed to register securities “on the shelf.” This means that the companies can file registrations for future offerings and can do one or multiple offerings from the single registration in the future without needing any new SEC staff clearance.

This shelf registration provides companies with flexibility to issue the securities when they choose. Often times, companies use this process when they are planning to offer securities on multiple occasions. Companies that are not short-form and shelf eligible are required to file a new registration for each public securities offering and have the SEC staff take action before completing the offering.

The New Rules

Form S-3 and Form F-3 Under the Securities Act of 1933

The new rules remove the condition for an NRSRO investment grade rating that is included in current short forms, Form S-3 and Form F-3, which are used by eligible issuers to register offerings of non-convertible securities under the Securities Act.

Instead of the ratings criteria, the final rules allow for the use of Form S-3 or Form F-3 if the issuer satisfies one of the following four tests:

The issuer has issued (as of a date within 60 days prior to the filing of the registration statement) at least $1 billion in non-convertible securities other than common equity, in primary offerings for cash, not exchange, registered under the Securities Act, over the prior three years.

The issuer has outstanding (as of a date within 60 days prior to the filing of the registration statement) at least $750 million of non-convertible securities other than common equity, issued in primary offerings for cash, not exchange, registered under the Securities Act.

The issuer is a wholly-owned subsidiary of a well-known seasoned issuer as defined under the Securities Act.

The issuer is a majority-owned operating partnership of a real estate investment trust that qualifies as a well-known seasoned issuer.

The final rules also include a temporary grandfather provision that allows an issuer to use Form S-3 or Form F-3 for a period of three years from the effective date of the amendments if it would have been eligible to register the securities offerings under the old provision.

Form F-9 Under the Securities Act

The final rules also rescind Form F-9, which is the form certain Canadian registrants use to register non-convertible investment grade debt.

The primary advantage to Form F-9 over the only other available form (Form F-10) is that it does not require reconciliation to U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

Changes to Canadian regulations to require Canadian issuers to use International Financial Reporting Standards instead of GAAP will mean that reconciliation also will not be required on Form F-10. As a result, F-9 and F-10 will have the same requirements, so Form F-9 will be rescinded effective Dec. 31, 2012.

Additionally, the final rules revise Form 40-F, the annual report form used by certain Canadian registrants, to ease the transition for issuers who previously filed registration statements on Form F-9.

Other Rules and Forms

There are other rules and forms that relied on similar criteria to the investment grade criteria in Form S-3 and Form F-3. The final rules revise the following rules and forms to refer to the new criteria in Form S-3 and Form F-3:

Form S-4 and Form F-4 under the Securities Act.

Schedule 14A under the Exchange Act.

Rules 138, 139 and 168 under the Securities Act.

Rule 134(a)(17) Under the Securities Act

Securities Act Rule 134(a)(17) permits the disclosure of security ratings issued or expected to be issued by NRSROs in certain communications deemed not to be a prospectus or free writing prospectus, such as “tombstone ads” or press releases announcing offerings. The amendments remove this safe harbor. Instead, the determination of whether such information constitutes a prospectus will be made in light of all circumstances of the communication.

What’s Next

The new rules take effect 30 days after publication in the Federal Register, except the rescission of Form F-9 and amendments to remove references to Form F-9 in other rules and forms will be effective Dec. 31, 2012.